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MIKE PATTON AND THE MR BUNGLE TAPE

On October 4th 1986, twenty nine years ago Faith No More played a
show at Humboldt state university in Arcata.

This pre 'Introduce Yourself', Chuck Mosley fronted gig has
earned a rightful place in the FNM history books for a reason other than the
band's performance however.

In the crowd at this show was an 18 year old Mike Patton
with his friend and Mr Bungle band mate Trey Spruance. After their set the band were
hanging out and smoking weed when Patton encouraged by Spruance handed a copy
of Mr Bungle's very first demo cassette 'The Raging Wrath Of The Easter Bunny'
to Mike Bordin. Here are a collection of quotes from the band members chronicling how Mike Patton joined Faith No More.....

Mike Patton | The Real Story 1993

"Faith No More played Eureka in a pizza parlour place we played dozens of times. There were 6 people there and 3 of them were my friends. It was really bad, a really pathetic show and I remember them standing around the van really upset. Puffy was really uptight wanting to know where to get weed. Nobody was talking to him, I think he asked us because we were just hanging around. But their situation then never even registered with me, touring was unreal, Warner Bros was like a Tom And Jerry cartoon. At that time I didn't wanna know about any of that shit. I gave them a tape and told them, This is what music from around here sounds like, from this region.”

Mike Bordin | Metal forces | 1990

"Mike came to a gig right out in the middle of nowhere
in California. Literally so far out, it was almost in Oregon! He gave us a
tape, and we were blown away by his voice, it was unbelievable. He was such a
ridiculously good singer. There was no comparison with Chuck."

The cassette was passed around the band, some members were unsure but Jim Martin loved it.

Mike Patton | The Real Story | 1993

"He didn't get the tape directly from my hands NO, God
NO! It always kinda makes me wonder, because he likes maybe 5 or 6 bands in the
whole world. So why would he like Mr Bungle ever in any form? It may well have
been savage tape, but the world is filled with savage music so why would he
like this one? I always wondered about that, right to this day. How does Mr
Bungle fit in with Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath, Led Zeppelin, the DUNE soundtrack,
the PLATOON soundtrack and Celtic Folk music? I don't get it, although it was obviously
some weird misfortune, a twist of fate. It shouldn't have happened that way,
but he was the only member of the whole band who liked that tape."

Roddy Bottum | Kerrang | 1990

"Mike Bordin really liked his Mr Bungle tape he gave
us. So did Jim Martin. I didn't, not my cup of tea."

Patton and friends ventured out to see FNM again in 1987, supporting the Red Hot Chili Peppers in San Francisco.

Mike Patton | The Real Story | 1993

"I never heard from him [Puffy] and the next time we
saw them was when they played with The Chili Peppers in San Francisco. I
remember it was one of our first San Francisco experiences, y'know, 'Oakies go
to the big city' thing. It was a fuckin' nightmare! We were gawking around like
we were on Mars. We were going to a big show in the city, we were driving, no parents,
no chauffeur, and we parked right outside The Fillmore in an ugly
neighbourhood. We came outside after the gig and our tyre had been slashed. We
were staying with Trey's grandparents , who were preachers, so we changed to
the spare and drove to his grandparent's place, left the car and decided to
deal with it the next morning. Where we came from, you parked where you wanted,
but I guess we'd parked in someone's driveway and the car was gone. So we
thought, 'someone's stolen our car!' God-fuckin'-dammit, we hated the place, we
hated the people, we just wanted to leave! We called the police and they told
us to try City Tow, which we didn't understand. What had we done to anyone? It
was, of course, there and the tyre had gone flat again. They wouldn't tow us to
a service station. They just wanted us out. We found a tyre place nearby and
just got the fuck outta there. I remember we were just yelling at people,
yelling anything at them 'YOU SUCK!' We were driving across the bridge, all
bummed out. And I looked over to my right
and in this BMW was a business man jacking off! He was waving his dick at us,
grinning, and it was like, ‘FUCK! LOOK AT THAT FUCKING GUY!' We were his
stimulus, young country boys! We got the full city treatment. We only came back
to the city for shows. We saw Venom and Metallica once. I suppose I was just living a miserably content life. knowing
there was nothing I would be able to do about it and not willing to go out of
my way to change it at all. I never thought or planned anything l never looked
through any 'big windows' like that. Even now I don't. I think it's a big fuckin'
mistake. I don't WANNA know!"

Fast forward a year to the autumn of 1988 and Faith No
More were on the hunt for a replacement singer after a rather unpleasant
sacking of Chuck. Patton, who was studying English and working in a record store got calls from Jim Martin and Mike Bordin asking him to audition.

Mike Patton | Kerrang | 1989

"People were calling us and saying, 'Yeah, I heard your tape from Jim Martin and I was like, 'What? Who's Jim Martin?' Then one day I get this call from this old-man-sounding guy: 'Hey man, wanna come down and jam? This is Jim from Faith No More. I just really resisted at first, I was really flobbergasted, like, 'Wow, I can't do this' I wasn't In a situation that I wanted to change."

Jim Martin | Kerrang | 1989

"We auditioned about five other people, and it was
pretty clear that Patton had superior natural ability. We called him and told
him to come down; we wanted him to go to work immediately. He was very
hesitant, like: 'I can't do this right now; it's not a good day. I have a
school box social to go to. And tomorrow is show and tell. If I had plenty of
advance warning, I might be able to come down for a little while, but today is
not good.' I told him he was at a crossroads
in life one way was to become a singer, the other way was to be a record
store clerk in a shitty little town in Northern California. He really was like
that. Very clean and shiny, nice kid. Milk and cookies type."

Mike Patton | The Real Story | 1993

"Yeah Puffy called, the band diplomat. And I think the reason
I did it was opportunity, to have a laugh, I'm not sure. I know my first
reaction was 'I can't'. I was going to school, I was in a band, maybe I could
do it on my Summer vacation but I didn't want it interfering with what I was
doing up there. As I remember, Puffy was greasing me in a peculiar way like,. ‘We
really like your tape and we're thinking of a couple of guys, maybe you could
come down and practice."

Bill Gould | The Real Story | 1993

" I was against the idea. But then he came down and
tried out. We told him to just sing with our music, whatever the first idea off
the top of his head was to just sing it, and he had a million ideas. He totally
understood what we were doing in a real physical sense. He took cues off the
music and sang over it. We tried out a few other guys, but he was the one
although I felt a bit guilty about it. Guilty because it seemed too easy. It
seemed like he was gonna get exploited to death; a young innocent with long
hair. Too easy to sell! But he could sing, he knew what we were doing and he
was the most natural choice."

Patton
hesitated at first but eventually made the 10 hour journey to SF with Trey and Trevor Dunn.

Mike Patton | The Real Story | 1993

"I got off the phone with the guy and immediately got on the phone with Trevor and told him the funny joke. This guy from Faith No More called me and asked me to join and of course I'm not going to do it.' It was like someone calling and saying, 'hey wanna work in the mail room at The White House. Yeah right what are you talking about?' I was very negative towards the idea. But l knew the band and knew there was no way I could fit into that scheme of things. I liked their second LP, but the first one was just bad hippy music. I hated it. The guy who egged me on to see them was Trey, who really liked their first record. And somewhere along the line I thought it wasn't going to hurt to do this. I felt it'd be an interesting musical experiment, it was two separate worlds. I didn't want it to be an audition thing though, 'here let me sing your songs'."

Mike Patton | Decibel | 2013

" I resisted it. I honestly did. Oddly enough, some of
my friends in Mr. Bungle were like, 'Just do this. It doesn't mean you have to
leave our band'. At that time, I was more concerned with completing my degree
and finishing school. I didn't see Faith No More as some yellow brick road to
success or failure anything. I just thought I would try it. The music wasn't
quite what I was about at the time but I took it as a challenge."

Trevor Dunn | Decibel | 2013

"At the time Mr. bungle was just a garage band. We
played a few shows in town, but none of us had any great visions of being rock
stars. We knew our music was weird. But Faith No More was hardly known at that
time as well they were a local band in San Francisco. They did have a couple of
records out, though. And the idea of being in multiple bands was nothing new to
us. I quit working in a pizza Joint so I could join a local bar band, which
ended up being my job all through college. So, joining Faith No More was just a
great opportunity for Mike. We were all fans of theirs, so the rest of us were
excited about it."

The audition went well!

Mike Patton | The Real Story | 1993

"It ended up being OK. They'd play me this riff they
were thinking of and just ask me to sing something with it. So I'd just start
singing something that came into my head. It was hard to say whether it was
good or bad, but it turned out to be a positive experience. I had, up to that point,
never played with anyone else in my life. It was like having the same
girlfriend for 20 years and all of a sudden seeing someone else too.. So
anything that was different, for better or for worse, was certainly
eye-opening. But I don't think it went particularly well or anything. Let's face it, Mr Bungle cannot write songs.
We've never been able to write songs.
Everything we've ever done has been like LEGOS, whereas their stuff were
real songs, verse/chorus, structured, rock music. It was so weird to me. So for
me to try and sing in that way was funny and challenging at the same time. I even
brought Trevor down with me because I was a little nervous. He was laughing at
me singing, he'd never heard me ‘sing' before because all I ever used to do was
scream. Which is, funnily enough, what they hired me for. That was the only
thing they'd heard. If I was to take out an ad, all that would be on it would
be 'growling, shouting'.”

After Patton, Faith No More auditioned a handful of vocalists (which included a jam with Chris Cornell) but very quickly decided Patton was their man.

Roddy Bottum | Kerrang | 1989

"We wanted someone that had a really good voice and a
lot of energy. So someone in our band had this tape from a band called Mr.
Bungle ..the guy had a really good voice and it was just a total psycho-maniac
band. It wasn't any commercial- pop band. He was the first person we
auditioned. We came together really quick."

Comments

I told him he was at a crossroads in life one way was to become a singer, the other way was to be a record store clerk in a shitty little town in Northern California. He really was like that. Very clean and shiny, nice kid. Milk and cookies type."